I see Mountain Lion as adding in a few more features from iOS. Do I think OSX will become iOS? I don't think that will happen.... a computer is still going to be a computer, especially for those who do deep level Photoshop, page layout, or movie editing work. I really don't see that type of thing going away.

OSX is still very powerful compared to iOS.

I think Apple is taking some of the features from iOS and porting them into OSX, in an attempt to unify the experience.

Certainly, OS X can benefit from some features/programs iOS has, but thankfully, at least so far, OS X is still going to be for those who still really need a powerful OS to get work done.

But iOS for many will be all they need; as in iPad mainly, which can take the place of a laptop for many folks who just need email, surfing, music, gaming, and things like facebook and twitter, etc.

There are some great things that I would love to see ported to OS X through the App Store; iBooks is one but there are many others (mainly games and specialty apps that would work really well on OS X).

I am glad that Apple is still giving people the choice on OS X how they wish to handle installations; App Store only, App Store and Chosen Developers (I would like to choose those developers, btw, as well as have the list, and they give that ability too apparently), and everything which could present problems like Windows deals with now.

I think there will be kinks ... and I hope those can be worked out amicably. I do not wish to be restricted in what I choose to run on my system. I use many Open Source programs and will continue to do so.

And so far, Apple has not removed that option of choice. Do I see OSX and iOS possibly merging someday? I think it would be possible, but a lot of things would have to be built into iOS, and the mobile hardware would need to mature somewhat. It could happen, but I don't see it anytime soon. There is still a strong role for general purpose computing these days, and OSX provides that. iOS is not there yet for sure.

For a lot of Mac users, having OS X morph into iOS would be all they really need. However, there are still plenty of power users who need all the choices and options available in a full computer OS. It will be interesting to see how Apple sets it up to allow for both within one OS.

Golf is a relatively simple game, played by reasonably intelligent people, stupidly.

For a lot of Mac users, having OS X morph into iOS would be all they really need. However, there are still plenty of power users who need all the choices and options available in a full computer OS. It will be interesting to see how Apple sets it up to allow for both within one OS.

I think OSX could end up being a bit like linux. When you power up, you would essentially have a choice- the OSX interface for general computing, or the iOS interface for media consumption and basic tasks.

Granted, I bet Apple would come up with a clever way to do it, like having an iPad dock to a macbook pro type keyboard and such. When it is docked, it is a full fledged computer, when undocked, more like a tradition iOS device. That would be really cool.

Of course, the inclusion of iOS features could just be that- adding some nice features from iOS to OSX.

I think OSX could end up being a bit like linux. When you power up, you would essentially have a choice- the OSX interface for general computing, or the iOS interface for media consumption and basic tasks.

Granted, I bet Apple would come up with a clever way to do it, like having an iPad dock to a macbook pro type keyboard and such. When it is docked, it is a full fledged computer, when undocked, more like a tradition iOS device. That would be really cool.

Of course, the inclusion of iOS features could just be that- adding some nice features from iOS to OSX.

Adam

I hope that the inclusion of iOS features is just that - adding some very nice features to OS X. Definitely.

Yes, when control of users can be obtained under the guise of providing 'help' for users and/or protecting users, especially children .... you could be count on it being done. We have history to prove that sadly...

Technology is moving in this direction, and has been for some time. Who fixes TVs anymore? You used to be able to replace components on a TV, and that is simply not possible any more. How many components do we fix in a computer? I say this is the way things are moving. Eventually, it will simply be an appliance.